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Recent Recognition of Archbishop Peckham—Bibliographical

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

John L. Peckham
Affiliation:
Yale University

Extract

Since the opening of the century there has been a marked awakening of interest in the works of John Peckham and an increasing appreciation of his importance in many areas of medieval life and thought. As lecturer at Paris and Rome, as Provincial Minister of the Franciscans in England, and as Archbishop of Canterbury, this active and learned scholar devoted his attention to many literary and executive tasks, making substantial contributions in such varied fields as theology, philosophy, religious education, homiletics, canon law, Franciscan history, science, liturgies, and poetry.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Church History 1934

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References

1 By Martin, C. T. for the Rolls Series (18821885)Google Scholar. Reviewed by Tout, T. F. in English Historical Review, II (1887), 555–9.Google Scholar

2 By C. L. Kingsford (sometime before 1895).

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9 Some of the difficulties involved in editing these manuscripts are mentioned, p. xxxv et seqq. (Prolegomena) and seem quite formidable.

10 Spettmann later added further titles to this bibliography; see Beiträge zur Geschichte der Philosophie des Mittelalters, suppl. Bd. 2 (1923), 241f.Google Scholar

11 Beiträge, etc., XX (1919), Hft. 6.Google Scholar

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13 Op. cit., p. 9, note 2.

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20 Written (Oliger claims) against Gerard of Abbeville.

21 Siger de Brabant: part 1. (Lonvain, 1911.)Google Scholar

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23 Ibid., pp. 95–102.

24 Ibid., p. 91.

25 Ibid., pp. 100–8 and 228–85.

26 Registrum Epistolantm Fr. Johannis Peckham, III, 842.Google Scholar

27 Archivum Franciscanum Historicum, XVIII (1925), 441–72Google Scholar; summarized on p. 441 (in Latin) and on pp. 471–2 (in French). Callebaut gives a reference (p. 472, note 1) to Peckham by Cardinal Ehrle in his “L'agostinismo …,” in Xenia thomistica (Korne, 1925)Google Scholar, which the reviewer has not been able to see.

28 Note the criticism of de Wulfs Le Traité ‘De unitate formae’ de Gilles de Lessines (p. 61f) occurring p. 443, note 5.

29 “La Théorie de l'Abstraction dans l'Ecole franciscaine, de Alexandre de Halès à Jean Peekham”, Archives d'histoire doctrinale et litteraire du moyen age, III (1928), 105–84Google Scholar. Peckham is also mentioned on pp. 105 and 175; and there is a good summary on p. 181f.

30 History of Medieval Philosophy (Translation by E. C. Messinger). London: Longmans, Green & Co., 1926Google Scholar. The first (French) edition appeared in 1900.

31 Op. cit., II, 261, 283, 335, 337, etc.

32 Ibid., I, 378f.

33 Ibid., II, 40–2.

34 Ibid., II, 57.

35 Ibid., II, 134.

36 Ibid., II, 142, note 1.

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41 Ibid., p. 176, note 3. See Spettmann, “Der Ethikkommentar des Johannes Pecham” (supra); and Pelzer, A., “Les versions Latines des ouvrages de Morale conservés sous le nom d' Aristote en usage au xiiie siècle,” Rev. Néo Scol., 1921, 316f.Google Scholar

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50 England under the Old Seligion (London, 1912), p. 233Google Scholar. See also his Parish Life in Medieval England (2nd. ed., London, 1907), passim.Google Scholar

51 London: W. B. Clive, 1920.

52 The Lollard Bible (Cambridge: University Press, 1920).Google Scholar

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54 Peekham, J. L., Archbishop Peckham as a Religious Educator: Yale Studies in Religion Number 7—Historical Monograph. (Seottdale, 1934).Google Scholar

55 Cambridge: University Press, 1926.

56 English Historical Review, XXVIII (1913), 625–35.Google Scholar

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63 English Ecclesiastical Studies (London; S. P. G. K.; New York & Toronto: Macmillan Co., 1929)Google Scholar. There are also data (pp. 280 and 350) drawn from Peckham's Registrum not noted under his name in the index.

64 Cambridge: University Press, 1922. The Archbishop is referred to as “great” (p. 26), “energetic” (p. 347), “the stern (“vigorous,” p. 346) reformer” (p. 60), and “strict disciplinarian” (p. 192. Of. pp. 312 and 358).

65 Episcopal Visitation of Monasteries in the Thirteenth Century (Manchester: University Press, 1931).Google Scholar

66 Little or no use is made of materials existing only in manuscripts.

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68 Op. cit., II, 13, 17, 31, 81f, 123, 131, and 205.

69 Cambridge, Massachusetts: The Mediaeval Academy of America, not yet published.

70 Fratris Johannis Pecham…. Tractatus tres de pampertate (British Society of Franciscan Studies, II; Aberdeen, 1910.)Google Scholar An excellent review of this work by P. Livarius Oliger appeared in Archivum Franciscanum Historicum, IV (1911), 147–52.Google Scholar

71 A. G. Little, M. R. James, and H. M. Bannister, editors. (British Society of Franciscan Studies, V; Aberdeen, 1914.)

72 Op. cit., p. 10.

73 Ibid., p. 21.

74 Ibid., p. 130.

75 Manchester: University Press, 1917.

76 Op. cit., pp. 39, 53, 57, 68 and 131.

77 Ibid., pp. 121 and 173.

78 London: S. P. C. K.; and New York: Macmillan, 1920.

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81 Manchester: University Press, 1924.

82 Op. cit., pp. 32, 33, 38 and 76.

83 London: Constable & Co., Ltd. (1926).

84 Op. cit., p. 67 (with two references to Peckham's Registrum). Twice later (p. 80—two more references to the Registrum—and p. 85) he is quoted in defense of the Franciscans.

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109 “Quellenkritisches” (supra).

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115 Aberdeen: University Press, 1915.

116 London: Macmillan & Co., Ltd., 1920. (Vol. III of A History of the English Church, edited by W. E. W. Stephens and William Hunt.) The index data s. v. “Peckham” are defective, as the Primate's name appears also on pp. 35, 38, 132, 218, 223, 238, 240–1, 289, 293, 308, 311, 314–5 and 349.

117 Paris, Fifth edition, 1924 (?). For the pagination of the Sixth edition, c. 1932, add 154 to the page-numbers here given.

118 Church Quarterly Review, XCIX (19241925), 69115Google Scholar. The article deals with the registers of eight prelates.

119 Op. cit., pp. 76–86 and 90–6. Also pp. 98–107, where illustrations of Peekham's turgid and rhetorical style are given in vigorous and amusing fashion.

120 “Report on the Muniments of the Dean and Chapter of Canterbury,” p. 261Google Scholar; in Historical Manuscripts Commission, Various Collections, 1901.Google Scholar

121 Ibid., p. 276 note 3. (Some less significant references to Peekham are listed in the index, ibid., p. 446.)

122 E. g., by Etienne Gilson, Father Cuthtert, Hartridge, et al.

123 E. g., Beiträge zur Geschichte der Philosophie des Mittelalters, XIX (1918), Hft. 2, 96Google Scholar; Franziskanische Studien, II (1915), 112Google Scholar; III (1916), 77, 137, 200, 305. 308; IV (1917). 56, 93, 106, etc.

124 Pars XIV (1908) and Pars XXII (1910).

125 In the preface to his edition of Meditatio Pauperis in Solitudine (Quaracehi, 1929).Google Scholar